Available Formats
Paperback
Published: 24th February 2016
Paperback
Published: 7th November 2023
Paperback
Published: 6th June 2013
Journey by Moonlight
By (Author) Antal Szerb
Translated by Len Rix
Translated by Len Rix
Pushkin Press
Pushkin Press
6th June 2013
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Fiction in translation
894.511332
Paperback
336
Width 120mm, Height 165mm
'On the train, everything seemed fine. The trouble began in Venice ...'
Mihaly has dreamt of Italy all his life. When he finally travels there, on his honeymoon with Erszi, he soon abandon his new wife in order to find himself, haunted by old friends from his turbulent teenage days: beautiful, kind Tamas, brash and wicked Janos, and the sexless yet unforgettable Eva. Journeying from Venice to Ravenna, Florence and Rome, Mihaly loses himself in Venetian back alleys and in the Tuscan and Umbrian countryside, driven by an irresistible desire to resurrect his lost youth among Hungary's Bright Young Things, and knowing that he must soon decide whether to return to the ambiguous promise of a placid adult life, or allow himself to be seduced into a life of scandalous adventure.
Journey by Moonlight is an undoubted masterpiece of Modernist literature, a darkly comic novel cut through by sex and death, which traces the effects of a socially and sexually claustrophobic world on the life of one man.
Translated from the Hungarian by the renowned and award-winning Len Rix, Antal Szerb's Journey by Moonlight is the consummate European novel of the inter-war period.
Just divine ... the kind of book that makes you imagine the author has had private access to your own soul -- Nicholas Lezard The Guardian [His] unmistakable masterpiece... an ironic epic in the style... of Thomas Mann's The Magic Mountain... masterfully allegorises the suicidal ideations overtaking the collective psyche of continental Europe -- Sam Sacks Wall Street Journal
Antal Szerb was born in Budapest in 1901. Though of Jewish descent, he was baptised at an early age and remained a lifelong Catholic. He rapidly established himself as a formidable scholar, through studies of Ibsen and Blake and histories of English, Hungarian and world literature. He was a prolific essayist and reviewer, ranging across all the major European languages. Debarred by successive Jewish laws from working in a university, he was subjected to increasing persecution, and finally murdered in a forced labour camp in 1945. Pushkin Press publishes his novels The Pendragon Legend, Oliver VII and his masterpiece Journey by Moonlight, as well as the historical study The Queen's Necklace and Love in a Bottle and Other Stories.